Accordingly, and after consultation with our academic authorities, we have decided to simply postpone the Monastic Symposium to 8-11 June 2021. Thus we would like to keep the program as it was foreseen for this year. If there are any changes in the meantime, they will be published here on the website of the symposium.

If you have already paid and you do not participate next year at the symposium, you will be reembursed.

The conference papers will be published, as usual, after the symposium. Let us take the postponement due to the COVID-19 crisis as an opportunity to prepare our talks well and finalize the papers in time for the symposium, so that the volume can be published soon afterward.

“The response to the call for papers offers a vast and original panorama of the topic, ranging from the most ancient sources of monasticism through the Rule of Saint Benedict, liturgy and prayer, art and culture to modern social challenges. Many themes are transversal and dialogical”.

— Bernard Sawicki, organizer

The organizers of the International Monastic Ed 2021 Symposium “Monasticism, Education and Formation” are happy to report that the response to our Call for Papers was very strong. We have collected 43 abstracts from 15 countries* and four continents. We are busy organizing the abstracts now and they soon will be outlined and catalogued on our web site and available for your review.

However, based on the response, we have organized the Monastic Ed Program; it is linked and ready for your perusal. Lastly, we would like to remind you that the next Early Registration Deadline is 31 March. So carpe diem! Register today.

Welcome

The Monastic Institute of the Faculty of Theology of the Pontifical Athenaeum Sant’Anselmo in Rome organizes an International Symposium every four years, dedicated to different themes related to monasticism. After discussing the themes of culture and of economy, this time we propose focusing on education and formation which are the themes partially connected to the previous ones. However, above all, the problems of education are currently very relevant, for various reasons, both in the modern world and in the Church, which dedicated the last Synod of Bishops to youth, and was crowned with the post-synodal exhortation Christus vivit.

The theme we propose includes four integrated and interwoven dimensions of monastic activity:

education as teaching both of knowledge and competences and as forming attitudes (Erziehung);

formation as an explicit activity focused on spiritual growth, both as religious education and as educating a sense of the religious dimension of experience;

external activities of monasteries, developed in different schools run by Benedictine monks and sisters as well as in other social contexts;

internal activities directed to the members of monastic communities as well as to oblates and guests visiting monasteries and their Guest Houses.

There are two factors which authorize and legitimize the monastic contribution to modern education: the long and rich history of monastic education and the presence of about 200 schools, colleges and universities around the world run by Benedictines. The Symposium would like to record, appreciate, analyze and develop this reality. So, the historical themes can range from the pedagogical and formative experiences of the Desert Fathers (especially present in the teachings of Evagrius and in the writings of Cassian) and other monastic authors, such as Basil the Great, Augustine and Gregory the Great; they can include proposals contained in various Rules and monastic traditions, both Oriental and Occidental, the social impact of monastic life, particularly visible in the work of Cassiodorus or Alcuin, in the tradition of lectio divina and hesychasm (Mount Athos but also, later, the monastery of Optina in Russia); they can cover the whole tradition of monastic sapiential methodology, combining studies and meditation as practised by Anselm of Canterbury and Bernard of Clairvaux and rediscovered by Jean Leclercq, particularly in his famous book L’amour des lettres et le désir de Dieu. One should not forget that among alumni of monastic schools there were Friedrich Nietzsche, Friedrich Hölderlin and Herman Hesse.

The look at the monastic impact on modern education can be directed by five values resulting from the Gospel interpreted by the Rule of Benedict and considered as essential by the Benedictine Colleges and Universities:

the primacy of God and the things of God;

reverent listening to the varied ways in which God is revealed;

the formation of community built on respect for individual persons who are each regarded as Christ himself

the development of a profound awareness of the meaning of one’s existence

the exercise of good stewardship.

Through these emphases Benedictine Colleges and Universities strive to promote the common good of Church and society and assist individuals to lead lives of balance, generosity and integrity. The most recent vision of the role of the Benedictine tradition in education today was outlined by Abbot Elias Lorenzo, the president of the International Commission on Benedictine Education (ICBE), at their conference in August 2019 : You may read the pdf of his address here.

Finally, all these values can be found in, and inspire, various modern methods and approaches to education, pedagogy or formation. Interactions, affinities but also contrasts of these values and other Benedictine characteristics of education or formation with new ways and methods of education (Montessori, Waldorf, education through art, writing, computers) would be another interesting group of themes for the Symposium.

As in previous cases, the inter- and hyper-disciplinary exchange will be achieved by the active and open participation of specialists in history, theology, sociology, archeology, pedagogics, education, coming from different continents, languages, cultures and also various academic traditions. That is always a distinctive feature of our projects. We would like to animate it by two panel discussions and one workshop, coming from different educational contexts. Some details currently are available on the “Special Guests” page, linked in the menu and located here. However, program details will be updated regularly on the Google Docs “Program” page, linked in the menu and located here.

Collaboration:

De Kovel; the Benedictine Centre at Radboud University Nijmegen and the Chair of Monastic Studies at KU Leuven; Nashotah House Theological Seminary in Wisconsin, USA; Department of XXth and XXIst century Culture, Faculty of Humanities, Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University in Warsaw; Religious Life Research Group (at Institute for Catholic Church Statistics, Poland); Titus Brandsma Institute (University of Nijmegen, Holland); Lehrstuhl für Religionspädagogik Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (München)